Chapter Twenty
His license to practice is issued in accordance with state laws worked out by AMA leaders. To prove his standing as an ethical practitioner, he must apply to and be accepted by his county and state societies in conformity with AMA procedures.
AMA publications provide him with continuing education in the form of scientific articles, research findings, reviews and abstracts from medical books, question-and-answer discussions of clinical problems, evaluations of new drugs, foods, and appliances, authoritative essays, editorials, letters to the editor, and a hundred similar appeals to his intellectual understanding of the profession he practices.
At the AMA's week-long convention each year, the
physician is exposed to what is called "a complete post-graduate
education under one roof." If he has
the interest and the stamina, he can attend his choice of hundreds
of lectures, exhibits, and demonstrations; see medical videotapes;
and carry home a suitcase full of pamphlets, books, and free drug
samples.
1. Richard Carter, The Doctor Business, (New York: Doubleday & Co., 1958) pp. 78, 79.
The AMA spends millions of dollars per year for television programs
to affect public opinion, maintains one of the richest and most
active lobbies in Washington, spends many millions in support of
favored political candidates, is instrumental in the selection of
the Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, and ... well,
let us just say that the AMA is a substantial force in American
medicine.
Simmons was really the driving force behind the organization in those early days, acting as general manager, but McCormack and Reed shared in a great deal of the association's work including legislative lobbying.
Simmons is particularly interesting because he headed the AMA's
drive against so called diploma mills, yet, it is said that he had
obtained his own medical degree through the mail from the Rush
Medical School.
For this reason, the AMA, from its inception, has been dominated by atypical physicians: men who enjoy the limelight and the thrill of accomplishment through medical politics. The typical physician, by comparison, is not only baffled by the intrigue and maneuvering for position behind the scenes, but wants no part of it for himself.
He is more than content to leave
the affairs of his association in the hands of those who enjoy the
game.
But, following the pattern of political
parties, the leadership maintains firm control over these
resolutions by having the members of the reference committees
appointed by the Speaker of the House, not by the delegates. The
committees are stacked to carry out the will of the leadership.
Those occasional innocents who are appointed for protective
coloration usually are bewildered and overwhelmed.
1. Ibid., pp. 73,74.
The president of the AMA is a figurehead. He has no
administrative or executive duties. His primary function is to
deliver talks to various groups around the country explaining the
program and goals of the Association. The position is honorary
and is not part of the AMA's permanent leadership.
There is a standing rule, adopted in 1902, that reads,
It is through tactics like these that the AMA perpetuates
dictatorial control over its members while wearing the mask of
democratic response to the will of the majority.
Doctors may not realize exactly who controls the AMA or
why, but they increasingly are becoming aware that the organization
does not represent them. By 1969, the AMA membership had stopped
growing, and by 1970, it actually had declined. By 1971, less than
half of all physicians in the United States were paying dues.
But he holds
even a mightier sword than that over the head of the organization
because he also is the man who is responsible for bringing in the
money The AMA could not survive on membership dues alone, and
without the income secured by him, the Association would undoubtedly
founder.
By 1973, under the tight control of Managing Editor Dr. Morris Fishbein, it had a print run of almost 200,000 copies each month and had extended its publication list to include twelve separate journals including the layman's monthly, Today's Health.(1)
Altogether the AMA now derives over ten million dollars per year in
advertising, which is almost half of the Association's total income.
His investments on behalf of the Association were extremely profitable, so the grateful membership could not, or at least dared not, complain too bitterly. One of the reasons for this investment success was that over ten-million dollars of the organization's retirement fund had been put into leading drug companies.(2)
1. This magazine has been particularly vicious in its attack against
vitamin B17 cancer therapy. See "The Pain Exploiters; The
Victimizing of Desperate Cancer Patients," Today's Health, Nov.,
1973, p. 28.
As such, he was a perfect
choice for the pharmaceutical cartel with its extensive financial
support of AMA programs. Either way, the success of the AMA and
those who direct it depends on the prosperity and good will of the
pharmaceutical industry.
And to add insult to injury, the chairman and vice-chairman of the Council stated before a Senate subcommittee that the large income derived from the various drug manufacturers had made the AMA "a captive arm and beholden to the pharmaceutical industry."
The AMA
responded by abolishing its Council on Drugs. The reason given was
"an economy move."(1)
1. Crossing the Editor's Desk," National Health Federation Bulletin,
Oct., 1973,
p. 30.
Item: While placating its member physicians with press releases and
public gesturing against government intervention in the field of
medicine, the AMA has been one of the most effective forces behind
the scenes to bring about just the opposite. Under the beguiling
excuse of "Let us defeat total socialized medicine by promoting
partial socialized medicine," it has provided the model legislation
for the nation's largest single step toward total government control
ever taken in this area.
PSRO authorized the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to create a national and a series of regional boards for the purpose of "reviewing" the professional activities of all doctors in the United States. The men on these boards are to be doctors, but they will be selected or approved by the government and they must follow standards set down by government agencies.
These government boards
are authorized to compel all doctors to standardize their
procedures, treatments and prescriptions, to conform with those
federal standards. All previously confidential patient records are
to be available to the government for inspection. Doctors who do not
comply can be suspended from practice.
The foundations and the financial-industrial forces behind them have performed a great service in helping to elevate the American medical profession above the relatively low level of prestige and technical competence it endured in 1910. It is probable, however, that the profession, in time, would have done so by itself, and it is certain that it would have been far better off if it had. The price it has paid for listening to the siren call of money has been too high.
It has
allowed itself to be lured onto the reef of a new medieval dogmatism
in medicine - a dogmatism that forces all practitioners into a
compliance with holy pronouncements of scientific truth - a dogmatism
that has closed the door on the greatest scientific advance of the
twentieth century.
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